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PAGE FOUR
Realism Achieved In ‘Escape’
deuifeift
Daily
Trojan
PAGE THREE
Bob Boyd Tops Cage Scorers
Vol. XLIII
72
Los Angeles, Calif., Wednesday, Jan. 9, 1952
Night Telephone - Richmond 5472
No. 66
ASSC TO DEBATE AMENDMENTS
"★★★★★★★★★★ ★★★★ LWM Fund Campaign Exceeds Coal
SQUIRES WILL CLOSE this semester's activities with a barn dance at the Mountain Oaks Lodge. La Cresenta, on Saturday. Membeis of the planning committee aiding Jim Lucostic with the final affair of the semester are, left to right. Squires Warren Clen-kenning, projects chairman; Charles McClure; Ed Ripley, president; and Tom Thorkel-son. Plenty of refreshments are assured the service organization's members. The dance will begin at 8:30 p.m.
Professor Slices It Thin
SC Has Role in National TV Show of Science Finds
Featuring the thin-slicing technique of Dr. Richard F. Baker, associate professor of experimental medicine, SC will be featured as one of nine universities taking part in the Johns Hopkins Science Review coast-to-coast telecast, Sunday, at 7 p.m. over KTTV, channel
The program, which will be entitled “Hig hlights of Science from Nine Universities,” will ------- present some of the greatest dis- ;
Swiss Religious Leader Speaks Today at Lecture, Luncheon
Dr. Adolphe Keller, visiting Swiss religious leader and a member of the World Council of Churches, will be gueet speaker today at a special religious lecture and at the weekly faculty luncheon:
“A leading educator and author, Dr. Keller al50 is an international-renowned contributor to religious Journals and councils,” said Clinton A. Nevman. university chaplain and co-sponsor of the lecture. “Anyone associated with religious
Keller is pastor of the John Knox chapel in Geneva.
The special afternoon lecture, which will be held in 133 Pounders hall at 3:15, is open to the students and faculty. Invitations also have been extended to religious leaders throughout the Los Angeles area to hear Dr. Keller discuss “Religious Trends in Free Europe and Behind the Iron Curtain.” The lecture is jointly sponsored by Chaplain Neyman, the School of Religion, and the Na- 1
organizations, both in the United i States and Europe.” Chaplain Ney- | tional Conference of Christians and man said, “is well acquainted with J*ws- *
the many contributions made by I At the faculty luncheon, which Dr. Keller.” will be held in the north dining
Recipient of numerous honorary room of Commons. Dr. Keller will degrees from institutions in tne speak on “The Status of the Cause United States and in Europe, Dr. i of Freedom in Europe.”
Twenty-Five TV Courses Offered in Spring Semester
Twenty-five courses have been set i up fo- the spring semester under the communications department! for students wishing to take work in television. Included in the 25 are nine University College courses.
Upper division courses offered under the day and night school program will be those in fundamentals of telecommunications. TV writing, production facilities, principles of TV production, telecommunications advertising, TV laboratory, public lations and publicity, audience TV teaching facilities were started search, production, acting, and at SC in 1948 and have been ex-
Two courses, an introduction to telecommunications and TV laboratory, are open to lower division students.
coveries and advances which have j come from university laboratories J during the past 25 years.
The telecast will present a re- i port on the scientific contributions which each of the nine universities believes to be its most important.
SC Portion The SC portion of the program j will show Dr. Baker using the thin- I slicing technique he helped develop which led to the world's first photographs of genes, tiny carriers of heredity. The scenes to be shown were selected from the SC cinema department film “The Thinnest Slice.”
William H. Sener, associate professor and head of the SC department of telecommunications, and Ivan Campbell, chose the scenes for the TV review. Their commentary, adapted from the original sound track, was written with Dr. Baker’s assistance.
The telecast, produced in Baltimore and sent coast-to-coast by the DuMont Television network, will present subjects ranging from development of the electronic wire recorder to research in heredity. Studies of a human being’s ability to withstand high temperatures and result in eradication of botulism will also be featured.
Program’s Purpose Purpose of the review program is to show that the greater percentage of scientific discoveries and basic
$12,000 Endowment Assures Scholarship
Outgoing president of Trovets, Andy Weber, issued his final report for the fall semester yesterday and stated that th^e funds now accumulated in the Living War Memorial fund amount to approximately $12,000 with the scholarship due to go into effect next September.
Present tally for this semester’s LWM drive is $2154.89, according to Weber, with a substantial contribution expected soon from Lockheed Aircraft’s “Buck-a-Month” charitable organization.
LWM Scholarship io Begin in Fall
To date total contributions to the LWM fund this semester are as follows: table collections, $174.79; mail, $287.00; members of Trovets, $19.32; classroom collections, $852.96; Dr, Frank C. Baxter’s Christmas readings, $552.21; organizations, $29.19; containers, $67.17; faculty, $72.25.
Returns were audited by Beta Alpha Psi, accounting fraternity. Not all contributions of faculty and Trovet members are represented in their category since collections and containers, included money from everyone.
According to the original requirements when the LWM fund was initiated in 1948, the scholarship was to become effective when funds had reached $10,000. Now that that mark has been met and passed the Trovets are ready to begin the operation of the memorial scholarship in the fall of 1952.
Trovet Elections To Be Held Tomorrdw
Recipients of the scholarship will receive $300 per semester for eight consecutive semesters to be used toward tuition and books. A 1.5 grade point must be maintained.
Outgoing President Weber stated that elections for next term’s Trovet officers would be held tomorrow at 12 in Founders hall. Officers for next semesters LWM drive will then be chosen. However, Weber added, Frank Ford will remain as general chairman. The Trovets plan to present Ford with a plaque at the Thursday meeting for his work in connection with LWM.
JOHN BRADLEY
, . semester's finale
ANDY WEBER . drive successful
World News
Commerce Students to Air Moans ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * Gripe Jury' Established
The School of Commerce has established a grievance committee designed to maintain a harmonious relationship between faculty and students.
This program, initiated for the first time in Commerce, will begin work next semester. Both students
DT Staff
. . . will meet tomorrow at noon in the city room.
receive the science in television. SC having become the first university in the nation to offer that degree.
The work of the department will be greatly forwarded by the opening next semester of a $100,090 studio, a gift of Capt. Allan Hancock,
programming and management.
scientific research is derived from Giaduates o. tne department **i]l university laboratories and how degree of bachelor of j these discoveries are applied by American industries for everyone's benefit.
i
In addition to the SC presenta- i tion, research from the University | of California, University of Pennsylvania. UCLA, Indiana university, Stanford university, Illinois Institute of Technology, University of , Utah, and Johns Hopkins will also j be shown.
Education
Notice
panded since that time.
Directed teaching will not be offered In Summer Session this year. Those who, as a result of this decision, need a double assignment in directed teaching this spring, should contact the Directed Teaching office, 353 Administration, immediately.
W. E. Cannon
Director of Student Teaching
and faculty will bring their grievances to the committee which will act as mediator between the two parties.
Committee Chairman Barbara Sanders said that students are enthusiastic toward the plan. Dean Lawrence C. Lockley also expressed optimism for it.
Complaints may be placed in the suggestion box'i on the first floor of Bridge hall or submitted directly to committee members. Barbara Sanders, chairman; Chuck McClure, and Terry Gordon. •
Committee action is taken only after it is determined that a complaint is validated. The committee makes no decision on the matter, it seeks only to effect a satisfactory result by bringing opposing views together. A faculty member may or may not relieve the complaint, the committee has nothing to say on this matter.
Names are kept confidential. A student may have a gripe but feel that he is not important enough to mention it before a faculty member.
Fall of French Qovt. Not Surprising
by Stan Kiefer
Monday the French government under Premier Rene Plevan fell when the National Assembly gave It a vote of no-confidence. It marks
tion that it would be shaky,’’ Dr. Rodee. It is impossible for the Com-Rodee sajd. munists or DeGaullists to form any
Rodee pointed out that to ap- sort of political coalition that could predate the situation in France; take over the French government, you must know something of he said.
the 14th time in five vears the French politics.
government of France has fallen.
What will be the repercussions? How will the international scene be affected by the unsteadiness of the government?
Dr. Carlton C. Rodee, professor of political science, does not think
There are three forces in the French National assembly. First force is the Communist, politically far tc the left; the second force is the DeGaullists, extreme rignt.
The third force is made up of the Socialists, the Radical Social-
the government's failure has any ists (which are neither radical or great significance at the present socialist), and the Christian Demotime. j crat~. These parties must unite and Another Coalition pick up votes from the right or T don't attribute any significance left factions if a coalition govern-to the fall of the government, be- ment is to stand. Rodet sa:d. cause thii cabinet, like it* prede- “If a new government is foimed
cessor, was just another coalition. It was known after the June eiec-
it must come from the political middle, or third force,” explained
The third force again will attempt to adopt a government and move to get more support from the moderate right wing.
“It is almost an insoluble problem. In fact, I think it is remarkable the third force has been able to govern France for five years,” Rodee said.
Won’t Affect U. S.
“I do not think it will affect the French foreign policy, their feelings toward the United States, or their position on the North Atlantic treaty organization or the European army,” he said.
Rodee feels the greatest problem
the new government will face if it is to stay in power will be the job of satisfying both the Socialists and the moderate right parties.
As for the threat of Communism, Rodee thinks it still is a danger, but points out the Communists have lost a little strength in both the National assembly and in municipal elections.
The trend in French political thinking tends toward the right and the DeGaulle movement, but Rodee cannot see a coalition that vould bring in the DeGaullists.
French political thinkers of the moderate right are afraid of De-Gaulle, who desires to regiment business <md rearm as quickly as vossible, Rodee said.
No matter who becomes the next premier, Rodee feels it will b« more
of the same old thing—rigid opposition from the right and left. There it once again will be more compromising to maintain power. Wage Struggle
The great fight in France since the war has been that of controlling wages or prices. Each political faction has desired control of one, not both. This has meant the coalition government must try to satisfy both factions, something that has proved impossible and led to the unsteadiness of government.
Rodee reiterated his feelings, saying, “I am absolutely confident there will be no change in French policy. I don’t think the French people are inclined toward neutralism. They are very nationalistic
Churchill Ends Truman Chat
by United Press
President Truman and Prime Minister Winston Churchill concluded their talks in W'ashington last night, and informants said they are agreed the time is not ripe for early top-level cold war talks with Soviet Premier Josef Stalin.
The White House issued only a sketchy account of their conversations, which could have an Important bearing on future western strategy.
* • *
The Senate Democratic Policy committee today gave priority status to statehood bills for Alaska and Hawaii. Democratic leader Ernest W. McFarland announced j after the policy committee's first j meeting in the new session that j the two statehood bills will get “early” Senate consideration.
• * i *
The 82nd Congress opened its election-year session yesterday and the Senate Republican policy committee immediately voted to oppose any tax increase this year and to clamp a tight rein on federal spending.
Senate Republican leaders paved the way for the first big fight of 1952—provided President Truman asks for a tax boost as expected—soon after Vice-President Alben W. Barkley and Speaker Sam Rayburn gaveled the Senate and House to order at noon yesterday.
Extra-Long Session
Scheduled for 6
Two constitutional amendments that have been in the legislative deep-freeze for more than one month will be brought before the ASSC Senate tonight in the student solons’ final and persaps lengthiest meeting of the fall semester.
Student representatives will meet in the Senate chambers beginning at 6, one hour and 15 minutes earlier than usual. Starting time was advanced in order that the senators will have time to handle the logjam of business that has piled up.
Blackwell Presents Women's Proposal
The two amendments, which would provide for an independent women’s representative and would replace on the Senate the IFC president with a popularly-elected organized men’s representative, were to have been discussed at the last meeting, held shortly before the Christmas holidays. That meeting lasted only 50 minutes, however, and neither amendment was dealt with at that time.
The independent women’s representative proposal was introduced by Independent Representative Jerry Blackwell. The aim is to place on the Senate both a men’s and a women’s independent representative. At present, independent students are represented by a single senator.
Casey Heads Committee cn Incorporation
Senator-at-Large Tony Ward introduced the proposal to change the method of selecting an crganiz°d men’s representative. The IFC president, who is elected by a vote of the interfraternity council (each member house having one vote), at present is on the Senate. Under Ward’s plan he would be replaced by a representative elected by a vote of all organized men’s students at the general election in the spring.
A special committee, headed by Senator-at-large Wendell Casey, w^.l report on its investigation into the possibility of incorporating the ASSC.
Appointment of a diploma committee to study the possibility of securing an improved sheepskin is also on the agenda.
Larry Spector is scheduled to give a report of the Great-er-University committee.
Long Beach To Hear SC
School
Band
SC’s Concert band will present an eight-selection program to the
Long Beach Polytechnic high school ; students this morning and after-! noon.
The 85-piece orchestra, directed by Clarence Sawhill, associate professor of music, will give the hour-long concert twice to allow both of the high school’s day sections to hear it.
Opening selection will be “March,” Op. 99. Serge Prokofieff. Other selections are as follows:
“Fire Bird,” Igor Stravinsky.
"El Pelicario,” Jose Padilla.
“Meditr.tior,” from “Thais,” Massenet.
A selection from “Pictures at an Exhibit.” M. Moussorgsky.
“Flight of the Bumble Bee," Rimsky Korsokov.
“Three Modernaires.”
“A Tribute to Romberg,”
MacLean.
Solos on the program
the “Three Modernaires" to be played by the trumpet trio, Don Eshoff, Harold Hines, and Jack Crawford; and a singing duet of “A Tribute to Romberg,” by Prof. and Mrs, Jerold Shepherd. Professor Shepherd is associate professor of music.
“A Tribute to Romberg” is a medley of Sigmund Romberg’s compositions which were arranged and adapted by Douglas MacLean.
Eight flutists of the orchestra will carry through the principal theme cf the “Flight of the Bumble Bee.”
The program is the third and final of a series of concerts presented to prep schools by the SC band. Other concerts were given at ; the Los Angeles Polytechnic high school and at the John Burroughs Douglas junior high school, Los Angeles.
The band intends to continue include the programs next semester.
Atty. Gen. Brown Rules Out Hand-Picking of Delegates
Capt. Kurt CarLsen and his battered ship, the Flying Enterprise, met the gravest peril of their 14-day battle against the sea last night when the stricken ship began taking water all over again. The freighter was settling farther in heaving seas, and the British towing tug, Turmoil, was forced to heave to to ease the strain on the towing cable.
Carlsen has stuck with his ship in spite of the danger in order to save salvage rights on her.
• * •
In Washington, President Truman personally has requested his name he kept out of the Minne-
SACRAMENTO. Jan. 8—(UP)— Brown also said the law prevents Attorney General Edmund G. ( a central committee or its execu-Brown today ruled it is illegal for' tive committee from transforming State Central committees of ?o- icself into a temporary campaign i iitical parties to hand-pick a slate committee for any pre-convention l of delegates pledged to any candi- presidential candidate, date at the presidential nominat- Last August, the executive oom-ing convention. mittee of the State Democratic
The ruling by the Democratic Central committee pledged the attorney general specifically bars a states 1952 presidential convention State Central committee from of- delegation to President Harry S. ficially throwing its support to any j Truman, presidential contender before
and patriotic, and very much anti- j sota presidential primary Mar. 18. Communist.” I it was disclosed yesterday.
contender primary election June
the
3.
El Rodeo
Portraits
Seniors will be photographed by the El Rodeo until Feb. 2.
Appointments must be mad with the university photograph? few days previous to actual shooting.
Veterans
Notice
Veterans attending school under PL 16 should see Mr. Barnes.
Veterans Administration training officer, at the Veterans Affairs '■flire about their spring regis-ration. Office hours are Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday mornings.

PAGE FOUR
Realism Achieved In ‘Escape’
deuifeift
Daily
Trojan
PAGE THREE
Bob Boyd Tops Cage Scorers
Vol. XLIII
72
Los Angeles, Calif., Wednesday, Jan. 9, 1952
Night Telephone - Richmond 5472
No. 66
ASSC TO DEBATE AMENDMENTS
"★★★★★★★★★★ ★★★★ LWM Fund Campaign Exceeds Coal
SQUIRES WILL CLOSE this semester's activities with a barn dance at the Mountain Oaks Lodge. La Cresenta, on Saturday. Membeis of the planning committee aiding Jim Lucostic with the final affair of the semester are, left to right. Squires Warren Clen-kenning, projects chairman; Charles McClure; Ed Ripley, president; and Tom Thorkel-son. Plenty of refreshments are assured the service organization's members. The dance will begin at 8:30 p.m.
Professor Slices It Thin
SC Has Role in National TV Show of Science Finds
Featuring the thin-slicing technique of Dr. Richard F. Baker, associate professor of experimental medicine, SC will be featured as one of nine universities taking part in the Johns Hopkins Science Review coast-to-coast telecast, Sunday, at 7 p.m. over KTTV, channel
The program, which will be entitled “Hig hlights of Science from Nine Universities,” will ------- present some of the greatest dis- ;
Swiss Religious Leader Speaks Today at Lecture, Luncheon
Dr. Adolphe Keller, visiting Swiss religious leader and a member of the World Council of Churches, will be gueet speaker today at a special religious lecture and at the weekly faculty luncheon:
“A leading educator and author, Dr. Keller al50 is an international-renowned contributor to religious Journals and councils,” said Clinton A. Nevman. university chaplain and co-sponsor of the lecture. “Anyone associated with religious
Keller is pastor of the John Knox chapel in Geneva.
The special afternoon lecture, which will be held in 133 Pounders hall at 3:15, is open to the students and faculty. Invitations also have been extended to religious leaders throughout the Los Angeles area to hear Dr. Keller discuss “Religious Trends in Free Europe and Behind the Iron Curtain.” The lecture is jointly sponsored by Chaplain Neyman, the School of Religion, and the Na- 1
organizations, both in the United i States and Europe.” Chaplain Ney- | tional Conference of Christians and man said, “is well acquainted with J*ws- *
the many contributions made by I At the faculty luncheon, which Dr. Keller.” will be held in the north dining
Recipient of numerous honorary room of Commons. Dr. Keller will degrees from institutions in tne speak on “The Status of the Cause United States and in Europe, Dr. i of Freedom in Europe.”
Twenty-Five TV Courses Offered in Spring Semester
Twenty-five courses have been set i up fo- the spring semester under the communications department! for students wishing to take work in television. Included in the 25 are nine University College courses.
Upper division courses offered under the day and night school program will be those in fundamentals of telecommunications. TV writing, production facilities, principles of TV production, telecommunications advertising, TV laboratory, public lations and publicity, audience TV teaching facilities were started search, production, acting, and at SC in 1948 and have been ex-
Two courses, an introduction to telecommunications and TV laboratory, are open to lower division students.
coveries and advances which have j come from university laboratories J during the past 25 years.
The telecast will present a re- i port on the scientific contributions which each of the nine universities believes to be its most important.
SC Portion The SC portion of the program j will show Dr. Baker using the thin- I slicing technique he helped develop which led to the world's first photographs of genes, tiny carriers of heredity. The scenes to be shown were selected from the SC cinema department film “The Thinnest Slice.”
William H. Sener, associate professor and head of the SC department of telecommunications, and Ivan Campbell, chose the scenes for the TV review. Their commentary, adapted from the original sound track, was written with Dr. Baker’s assistance.
The telecast, produced in Baltimore and sent coast-to-coast by the DuMont Television network, will present subjects ranging from development of the electronic wire recorder to research in heredity. Studies of a human being’s ability to withstand high temperatures and result in eradication of botulism will also be featured.
Program’s Purpose Purpose of the review program is to show that the greater percentage of scientific discoveries and basic
$12,000 Endowment Assures Scholarship
Outgoing president of Trovets, Andy Weber, issued his final report for the fall semester yesterday and stated that th^e funds now accumulated in the Living War Memorial fund amount to approximately $12,000 with the scholarship due to go into effect next September.
Present tally for this semester’s LWM drive is $2154.89, according to Weber, with a substantial contribution expected soon from Lockheed Aircraft’s “Buck-a-Month” charitable organization.
LWM Scholarship io Begin in Fall
To date total contributions to the LWM fund this semester are as follows: table collections, $174.79; mail, $287.00; members of Trovets, $19.32; classroom collections, $852.96; Dr, Frank C. Baxter’s Christmas readings, $552.21; organizations, $29.19; containers, $67.17; faculty, $72.25.
Returns were audited by Beta Alpha Psi, accounting fraternity. Not all contributions of faculty and Trovet members are represented in their category since collections and containers, included money from everyone.
According to the original requirements when the LWM fund was initiated in 1948, the scholarship was to become effective when funds had reached $10,000. Now that that mark has been met and passed the Trovets are ready to begin the operation of the memorial scholarship in the fall of 1952.
Trovet Elections To Be Held Tomorrdw
Recipients of the scholarship will receive $300 per semester for eight consecutive semesters to be used toward tuition and books. A 1.5 grade point must be maintained.
Outgoing President Weber stated that elections for next term’s Trovet officers would be held tomorrow at 12 in Founders hall. Officers for next semesters LWM drive will then be chosen. However, Weber added, Frank Ford will remain as general chairman. The Trovets plan to present Ford with a plaque at the Thursday meeting for his work in connection with LWM.
JOHN BRADLEY
, . semester's finale
ANDY WEBER . drive successful
World News
Commerce Students to Air Moans ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * Gripe Jury' Established
The School of Commerce has established a grievance committee designed to maintain a harmonious relationship between faculty and students.
This program, initiated for the first time in Commerce, will begin work next semester. Both students
DT Staff
. . . will meet tomorrow at noon in the city room.
receive the science in television. SC having become the first university in the nation to offer that degree.
The work of the department will be greatly forwarded by the opening next semester of a $100,090 studio, a gift of Capt. Allan Hancock,
programming and management.
scientific research is derived from Giaduates o. tne department **i]l university laboratories and how degree of bachelor of j these discoveries are applied by American industries for everyone's benefit.
i
In addition to the SC presenta- i tion, research from the University | of California, University of Pennsylvania. UCLA, Indiana university, Stanford university, Illinois Institute of Technology, University of , Utah, and Johns Hopkins will also j be shown.
Education
Notice
panded since that time.
Directed teaching will not be offered In Summer Session this year. Those who, as a result of this decision, need a double assignment in directed teaching this spring, should contact the Directed Teaching office, 353 Administration, immediately.
W. E. Cannon
Director of Student Teaching
and faculty will bring their grievances to the committee which will act as mediator between the two parties.
Committee Chairman Barbara Sanders said that students are enthusiastic toward the plan. Dean Lawrence C. Lockley also expressed optimism for it.
Complaints may be placed in the suggestion box'i on the first floor of Bridge hall or submitted directly to committee members. Barbara Sanders, chairman; Chuck McClure, and Terry Gordon. •
Committee action is taken only after it is determined that a complaint is validated. The committee makes no decision on the matter, it seeks only to effect a satisfactory result by bringing opposing views together. A faculty member may or may not relieve the complaint, the committee has nothing to say on this matter.
Names are kept confidential. A student may have a gripe but feel that he is not important enough to mention it before a faculty member.
Fall of French Qovt. Not Surprising
by Stan Kiefer
Monday the French government under Premier Rene Plevan fell when the National Assembly gave It a vote of no-confidence. It marks
tion that it would be shaky,’’ Dr. Rodee. It is impossible for the Com-Rodee sajd. munists or DeGaullists to form any
Rodee pointed out that to ap- sort of political coalition that could predate the situation in France; take over the French government, you must know something of he said.
the 14th time in five vears the French politics.
government of France has fallen.
What will be the repercussions? How will the international scene be affected by the unsteadiness of the government?
Dr. Carlton C. Rodee, professor of political science, does not think
There are three forces in the French National assembly. First force is the Communist, politically far tc the left; the second force is the DeGaullists, extreme rignt.
The third force is made up of the Socialists, the Radical Social-
the government's failure has any ists (which are neither radical or great significance at the present socialist), and the Christian Demotime. j crat~. These parties must unite and Another Coalition pick up votes from the right or T don't attribute any significance left factions if a coalition govern-to the fall of the government, be- ment is to stand. Rodet sa:d. cause thii cabinet, like it* prede- “If a new government is foimed
cessor, was just another coalition. It was known after the June eiec-
it must come from the political middle, or third force,” explained
The third force again will attempt to adopt a government and move to get more support from the moderate right wing.
“It is almost an insoluble problem. In fact, I think it is remarkable the third force has been able to govern France for five years,” Rodee said.
Won’t Affect U. S.
“I do not think it will affect the French foreign policy, their feelings toward the United States, or their position on the North Atlantic treaty organization or the European army,” he said.
Rodee feels the greatest problem
the new government will face if it is to stay in power will be the job of satisfying both the Socialists and the moderate right parties.
As for the threat of Communism, Rodee thinks it still is a danger, but points out the Communists have lost a little strength in both the National assembly and in municipal elections.
The trend in French political thinking tends toward the right and the DeGaulle movement, but Rodee cannot see a coalition that vould bring in the DeGaullists.
French political thinkers of the moderate right are afraid of De-Gaulle, who desires to regiment business